Yell County (Danville), Arkansas

E-Recording Eligible

Yell County accepts electronic recording for real estate documents.

Yell County at a glance

Population (2024 est.)
20,134
County seats
Danville and Dardanelle
Recording office
Circuit Clerk
Typical home value (May 2026)
$168,000
FIPS code
05149

Yes — Yell County's Danville district accepts electronic recording. Deeds, mortgages, satisfactions, and other notarized real estate documents can be submitted digitally to the Circuit Clerk's danville district office through approved e-recording channels instead of mailing paper originals, which typically cuts recording turnaround from days to hours.

Yell County is home to about 20,134 residents (U.S. Census Bureau, 2024 estimate), ranking 33rd by population among the 75 Arkansas jurisdictions in this directory. Its population has held steady since 2020. Typical home values in the county are around $168,000 (Zillow Home Value Index, May 2026), so promptly and correctly recorded deeds and liens matter for buyers, sellers, and lenders here.

In Arkansas, the elected Circuit Clerk serves as ex officio recorder of deeds. Ten Arkansas counties are split into two judicial districts, each with its own courthouse and its own recording office — documents must be recorded in the district where the property sits. Yell County maintains more than one recording district, each with its own office — this page covers the Danville district.

For remote online notarization (RON), e-recording eligibility means the entire transaction can stay digital: sign and notarize online with Notaron, then submit the notarized document electronically for recording — no printing, shipping, or wet-ink originals. Title companies, lenders, and signing services use this combination to close and record the same day.

Frequently asked questions

Does Yell County (Danville) accept electronic recording?

Yes. Yell County (Danville district) accepts electronic recording, so deeds, mortgages, and other real estate documents can be submitted digitally through approved e-recording channels.

Who records deeds in Yell County?

Real estate documents are recorded by the Circuit Clerk. Yell County maintains more than one recording district, each with its own office — use the Danville district office for property in this district.

Which recording district of Yell County do I use?

Yell County maintains more than one recording district, each with its own recording office. Record in the district where the property is located — this page covers the Danville district.

Can I notarize online and record in Yell County?

Yes. Remote online notarization is valid in Arkansas, and because this recorder accepts electronic documents, a document notarized online with Notaron can be e-recorded without ever being printed.

Who uses e-recording with online notarization?

Notaron pairs 24/7 remote online notarization with e-recording-ready output, built for the teams that record documents in Yell County every day.

Title & escrow companies

Close remotely and record in Yell County the same day: RON-notarized closing packages go straight from signing to e-recording — no courier, no mail-back.

Notaron for title companies

Lenders & loan servicing

Fund faster in Yell County: e-recordable mortgages, deeds of trust, and satisfactions notarized online cut days off recording turnaround and reduce rejection risk.

Notaron for lenders

Law firms & attorneys

Deeds, POAs, and estate documents for Yell County clients can be notarized on video and e-recorded without the client ever leaving home.

Notaron for law firms

Notarize online and e-record in Yell County

Connect with a licensed notary on video 24/7 — $25 per session, and your notarized documents are ready for electronic recording.

Start a Notarization

Other counties in Arkansas

Population: U.S. Census Bureau, Vintage 2024 county estimates. Home values: Zillow Home Value Index (ZHVI). County data updated 2026-07-11. E-recording eligibility is reviewed regularly but can change — confirm with the recording office before submitting time-sensitive documents.

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